Migratory Fishes of South America [electronic resource] Biology, Fisheries and Conservation Status
By: World Fisheries Trust
Contributor(s): Baer, Anton | Carolsfeld, Joachim | Harvey, Brian | Ross, Carmen | International Development Research Centre | The World Bank | World Fisheries Trust
Material type: TextPublisher: Washington, D.C. : The World Bank, 2004Description: 1 online resource (384 p.)ISBN: 1552501140Subject(s): Agriculture | Ecosystems and Natural Habitats | Environment | Fisheries and Aquaculture | River Basin Management | Water Resources | Wetlands | Wildlife ResourcesAdditional physical formats: Print Version:Online resources: home Abstract: Fish species that migrate within the great rivers of South America support important local fisheries but are little known outside their native range. This book, written specially for the World Bank and the International Development Research Centre, represents the first collection of the work of local scientific experts on these remarkable fish. The authors cover the Upper Paraná, Paraguay-Paraná, Uruguay and São Francisco basins in Brazil, as well as the Brazilian and Colombian Amazon. They discuss not only the principal migratory species and their fascinating relationship with the water cycle in the rivers and wetlands, but also the fisheries they support, and their often precarious conservation status.Fish species that migrate within the great rivers of South America support important local fisheries but are little known outside their native range. This book, written specially for the World Bank and the International Development Research Centre, represents the first collection of the work of local scientific experts on these remarkable fish. The authors cover the Upper Paraná, Paraguay-Paraná, Uruguay and São Francisco basins in Brazil, as well as the Brazilian and Colombian Amazon. They discuss not only the principal migratory species and their fascinating relationship with the water cycle in the rivers and wetlands, but also the fisheries they support, and their often precarious conservation status.
Description based on print version record.
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